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10 Good Reasons to
eat Organic!
October 4,
2006
I was working on our newsletter today and one
of our editors, Sharon Meyers, sent this over to me...I know you've seen it before,
but read it again, print it out and pass it on. Words to
remember!
10 Reasons to eat
Organic! |
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Local foods are
safer. Or, at least, you can find out if
they are. Organic food standards are high but
there are still companies out there attempting to fudge
the rules. When you buy local, it's easy to check out
what you're buying and won't require that you hire
Magnum, P.I. to do it. The great thing about local media
is that they love to cover this stuff. If, for any
reason, a local farm is mixed up in nefarious activities,
there's a good chance your paper has a reporter dreaming
of life at The New York Times who'll be on the
job for you. In lieu of this, be inquisitive at the
farmers market and you'll be surprised how quickly you're
up to date on the local scoop. Farmers who adhere to a
strict code of ethics love to talk about who else does,
and who doesn't.
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Organic foods are
safer. Organic certification standards are
the public's assurance that their food and products
have been grown and handled according to sustainable
procedures without toxic inputs. At least that's
what the law says. But even though many companies still
cheat the system, most of them play by the rules. These
rules are in place to help both soil longevity and the
health and safety of the consumer. Many Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)-approved pesticides were
registered long before extensive research linked these
chemicals to cancer and other diseases. Now, the EPA
considers 60 percent of all herbicides, 90 percent of all
fungicides, and 30 percent of all insecticides as
potentially cancer causing, none of which meet organic
criteria. You can't always be certain you're getting safe
food, but eating organic stacks the odds in your
favor.
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Organic food
tastes better. Many people would be
amazed to taste the difference between garden-grown
fruits and vegetables and wild meat compared to what you
find down at Food4Less. The main reason for this has to
do with something called trophic levels, which has to do
with the way plants and animals feed up the food chain.
When foodeven natural foodis manufactured,
such as plants grown in poor soil with some added
nutrients or animals raised using drugs and a non-native
diet, their physiological chemistry is altered. This not
only changes their nutrient content but the way they
taste.
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Organic food is
more nutritiouswhich stands to
reason based on the above. When soils are depleted and
then fertilized, only certain nutrients are added with
fertilizers. The resulting losses are many of the plants'
original phytonutrients. While not a major component of
any individual plant, they add up in your diet and become
a major component of who you are. Lack of phytonutients
in our diet carries the blame for many modern-day
maladies. With regard to meat, it's basically the same
story. Animals raised on a poor diet are, as you might
imagine, less healthy to eat because you, too, are part
of the trophic level paradigm.
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You won't have to
eat genetically modified organisms (GMO).
A GMO is a plant, animal, or microorganism whose
genetic sequence has been modified to introduce genes
from another species. Because there's no knowledge of the
long-term impact of GMOs to our health, they are
forbidden by the Soil Association Standards for Organic
Food and Farming. Furthermore, animals raised organically
cannot be fed GMOs, as well as antibiotics, added
hormones, or other drugs.
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Your drinking water will be
safer. The EPA
estimates that pesticides contaminate groundwater in 38
states, polluting the primary source of drinking water
for more than half the country's population. Organic
farmers don't use toxic chemicals that leech into your
groundwater. They also practice water conservation, which
also leads to less waste intrusion into our
aquifers.
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Your kids will be
healthier. The toxicity of pesticide
residue is determined by not only the chemical, but our
body weight in relation to how much we consume.
Therefore, your children are at more risk than you are.
It's estimated that the average child receives four times
more exposure than the average adult to at least eight
widely used cancer-causing pesticides in food. To try and
minimize this risk, buy organic, but also make sure that
your family eats a wide variety of
foods.
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To help farmers
and farm communities. It's estimated that
the U.S. has lost more than 650,000 family farms since
1990. The USDA predicts that half of the U.S.
farm production comes from only 1 percent of farms.
Organic farming may be one of the few survival tactics
left for the family farm and rural communities. The
majority of organic farms are still small-scale
operations, generally on less than 100 acres, and using
an average of 70 percent less energy. Small farms use far
more sustainable and environmentally friendly practices
than large-scale farms do. For example, small farms
utilize manure to fertilize soil, naturally recycling the
land. Industrial farms produce so much manure that it's a
human health risk. The overspill of manure has
contaminated water wells with E. coli and other
pathogens. This brings up another subject, that
industrial farms stillthough now
illegallyfeed animals the ground-up remnants of
other animals not part of their natural diet. This has
led to pathogens, such as E. coli, getting into
our foods in the first place. Furthermore, farm workers
are much safer on small farms. A National Cancer
Institute study found that farmers exposed to herbicides
had six times the risk of non-farmers of contracting
cancer. Field workers on conventional farms, due to their
direct exposure, are the most vulnerable to illness as a
result of pesticide use. Organic farms eliminate that
risk by eliminating harmful pesticides and other chemical
inputs from their practices.
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For more humane
treatment of animals. Factory farms
treat animals like commodities. They are usually kept in
tightly confined pens or cages and often never move more
than a few feet for their entire lives. They are also fed
the cheapest foods available, no matter how it affects
theirand then ourhealth. Besides the fact
that a host of illnesses have entered our world as a
direct result of this practice, it's also just not nice.
Animals on organic farms are far likelier to be raised
without cruelty. They are also fed a diet more like what
they would eat naturally and studies tell
ussurprisethat they tend to be significantly
healthier than their factory-raised
counterparts.
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To promote a
vibrant economy. Organic products
only seem more expensive because people base their cost
on their sticker price alone. However, this represents a
mere fraction of their true cost. Market prices for
conventionally grown foods do not reflect the costs of
federal subsidies to conventional agriculture, the cost
of contaminated drinking water, loss of wildlife habitat
and soil erosion, or the cost of the disposal and cleanup
of hazardous wastes generated by the manufacturing of
pesticides. Compared to local farms, there's also
transportation and its pollutants to consider. This all
means that, essentially, you can pay now or pay
laterjust remember that you're going to be charged
interest, mainly in the form of a socially and
ecologically diminished world to live
in.
Live in Health,
Beth Aldrich
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